One-size-fits-all faith formation programs don’t exist, but a new online platform called FORMED has taken a serious stab at providing a wealth of resources to fit with the hectic lives of parishioners.

“Not everybody has the time to be able to sign up for a multi-week series or be able to come to the parish because they work or they have different schedules,” said Andy Wagenbach, co-director of faith formation and youth ministry at St. Peter in North St. Paul. “They can do these things at their house. The fruit of that is that they’re able to still be formed even though they’re not able to come on site.”

Forty parishes in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis have been offering the program since it launched in 2015. FORMED provides a one-stop shop of formation materials ranging from videos to Church documents to help adults, youth and families grow in their faith. The program was created by the Augustine Institute in Denver, which has provided both faith formation and theological education since 2004.

“It’s meant to be in every home within the parish really empowering, enabling parishioners to take ownership of their own formation, so that the great teachings of the Catholic Church aren’t confined to a parish program,” said Annie Grandell, YDisciple coordinator for the Augustine Institute.

Grandell became familiar with FORMED while using the Augustine Institute’s YDisciple program as the youth minister for St. Michael and St. Mary in Stillwater. YDisciple provides online material for small groups of youth to grow in their faith, and is now among the resources at FORMED.

St. Peter has also used YDisiciple through FORMED for youths and the St. Peter Catholic School students in grades five through eight. Families in the St. Peter’s young family ministry also use FORMED talks at home, and they discuss them at the ministry’s gatherings.

FORMED draws from a wealth of Catholic resources such as Ignatius Press and Catholic Lighthouse Media. Content works across a variety of devices, from desktop computers to smart phones, and doesn’t require supplement CDs, DVDs or workbooks.

Its content provides a boon for sacramental preparation, which is how St. Michael in Farmington has used the program. Kathy Ruhland, the parish’s director of faith formation, said the parish has found it valuable since subscribing in 2016.

She gave the example of a family that asked to watch and discuss together a FORMED video on confession for their child’s make-up lesson, even though parent participation wasn’t required. Ruhland didn’t hesitate to grant permission.

“Because the goal is to have families embrace this and talk about it as a family [and] have it bolster their faith,” she said.

Wagenbach said he has seen FORMED build marriages, since couples can watch and discuss videos. Some of the couples who went through FORMED’s “Beloved Series” on marriage shared with him that “it was kind of the first time in their marriage that they had actually done a series together as a couple. Some of them had been married eight to 10 years.”

While FORMED has content for children, youths and families, it doesn’t stop there. Ruhland said most of the content works for adult faith formation. Last fall, St. Michael hosted a Bible study on the Eucharist using FORMED content.

Numbers for participation in FORMED still have much room to grow. Parishes pay $1,680 per year to give every parishioner access to the site. St. Michael in Farmington has 284 subscribers. St. Peter is up to 350, after encouraging parishioners to try it during Lent and Advent.

Ruhland and Wagenbach said they hope to see more participation and that there’s been good feedback thus far.

“I think the biggest thing [for participants] is just realizing that instead of maybe watching Netflix, they can watch something about their faith,” Wagenbach said.

Correction: This story was updated to correct the amount that parishes pay annually for FORMED. A previous version stated the amount was $16,180.

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Marcia

Is each parish paying $16,180 per year for this? That would be almost $60 per user in Farmington. There are so many excellent Catholic resources online that are free. That price seems crazy high. You could by everyone in the parish a copy of the Catechism and hire a part-time instructor to walk them through it for that. Also, there is tons of great Catholic material on Netflix. It’s not an either/or. http://patrickmadrid.com/a-plethora-of-catholic-movies-available-on-netflix/